A LABOUR frontbencher suffered a humiliating gaffe when she got the number of rough sleepers in her constituency wrong by more than 2,750.
Dawn Butler said she had reduced the number of homeless in Brent, North London, from 3,000 down to zero.
ROUGH NUMBERS
But the real number of people living on the streets is 248, LBC reported, based on GLA figures.
A separate report from Brent council claimed to have only found one reported homeless person in the borough in 2007.
Ms Butler, shadow women and equalities minister, told LBC: “I can tell you that in 2007, I had around 3,000 or so rough sleepers in Brent.
"The Labour government invested an extra £5m to make sure we can eradicate rough sleeping. We approached the people who were sleeping rough and we helped them out of that situation."
I can tell you that in 2007, I had around 3,000 or so rough sleepers in Brent.
Dawn Butler
But when the figure was queried by host Nick Ferrari, she replied: "I think it was 3,000 in Brent. It was a large number."
There are currently 4,741 rough sleepers in England with 8,855, in London alone, according to the Greater London Authority.
Ms Butler was grilled by Mr Ferrari who accused her of trying to tackle the country’s homelessness crisis without knowing the “size of it”.
The presenter said: "You're telling me the Labour Party will stop the problem of rough sleeping, but you don't know how many people there are."
MOST READ IN POLITICS
Ms Butler admitted: "I don't know all the figures and all the numbers. It's not actually my area.
"Let's not take for fact what I've just said in terms of the numbers.
"But I can tell you this. We had a number of rough sleepers in Brent and this is what we did to eliminate rough sleepers and we almost eliminated rough sleeping until 2010 and then Labour were not in government."
It comes just 24 hours after Ms Butler suffered another slip-up after last night's ITV election debate.
She mistakenly endorsed Boris Johnson instead of her own leader, Mr Corbyn.
Speaking to ITV she said: "‘Boris Johnson talked about the NHS with compassion, he talked about nurses and doctors.
"He talked about schools. He talked about all the policies that’s going to make the difference in real peoples’ lives."
We pay for your stories! Do you have a story for The Sun Online news team? Email us at [email protected] or call 0207 782 4368 . You can WhatsApp us on 07810 791 502. We pay for videos too. Click here to upload yours.